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A former Minister of Finance and Agriculture,
Mallam Adamu Ciroma, said in Kaduna on
Saturday said he lost interest in Nigerian
politics because of the insincerity of the
leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party on
rotational Presidency.
He said rather than abiding by the agreement on
rotational presidency, the party leadership
scuttled it soon as former President Umaru Yar-
Adua died in 2010.
Ciroma, who spoke on the Liberty FM, Kaduna,
insisted that somebody from the North should
have completed Yar’Adua’s tenure and not
President Goodluck Jonathan.
Ciroma said, “I was there when the party was
moving the Presidency between the North and
the south. And this President was there when
General (Olusegun) Obasanjo presided over the
agreement in the PDP, which agreed that the
movement of the Presidency from North to
South should be based on two terms.
“President Obasanjo did his two terms on behalf
of the South, and Yar’Adua was doing his first
term on behalf of the North but unfortunately,
he died. And the PDP leaders, instead of
agreeing on somebody from the North to
complete Yar’Adua’s term, they all went to ensure
that the Vice President became the President;
and since the leaders we made agreement with
departed from this agreement, I lost interest in
Nigerian political affairs.
“Because if you cannot trust people you form a
party with, you win power with, you work hard
with, whether it is Tony Annenih or any other of
the party, I lost interest in the party itself.”
While assessing the party since 2011 to date, the
former minister expressed concern over the
current security challenge in the land.
He said, “The biggest of the worries facing the
country is that of insecurity and the issue of
Boko Haram, people who steal and the issue of
bombing. These are problems and they become
even bigger sources of worry as we look
forward to 2015 general elections.
“No matter what you do, politicians will always
tend to get their affairs in line with the
elections and a lot of people are worried,
whether the 2015 elections will take place as we
expect. Everybody is hopeful that the election
will be well conducted and the result should be
generally acceptable.”
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